Female ejaculation is the sudden expulsion of fluid from the Urethra of women during sexual excitement or an orgasm. This fluid comes from small glands next to the urethra where the urine comes out, not the vagina, and is therefore often confused with urine. Some women ejaculate with orgasms, but not always. This is perfectly natural and normal and should not be considered embarrassing.

Description of Female Ejaculation

A small amount of sticky, milky-like substance that contains glucose and Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) is expelled during intercourse. These substances are not found in urine. Some women may pass a small amount of urine during orgasm due to muscles contracting, this is not ejaculation. Expulsion can be so little that it is not noticeable.

How is female ejaculation achieved?

Most women who ejaculate do so during an orgasm. Sexologists have shown that ejaculation occurs when women experience sexual stimulation of the ‘G-Spot’. Beverly Whipple, the most influential sex researcher of all time proved the existence of the G-Spot in 1983. She was also the first to prove that women can and do ejaculate!

What is the G-Spot?

The existence of the G-Spot was denied by leading gynecologists when German gynecologist, Ernst Grafenberg, unexpectedly discovered a bean-like shape in the front wall of the vagina in the 1940's. It's a sensitive area just inside the front wall of the vagina, between the back of the pubic bone and the cervix. Many women feel intense pleasure when it's stimulated yet others feel nothing.

Female ejaculation was considered rare in the early 1970s'; however today more and more people are aware of this kind of secretion in women. It is not only men that reach ejaculation; women are also extremely capable of ejaculating. Knowing where her G-Spot is, makes this possible.